Massachusetts Democratic Rep. Barney Frank ridiculed the Log Cabin Republicans in a Wednesday interview with The Huffington Post, suggesting that “their role model is Uncle Tom.” The gay Republican group responded by accusing Frank of being “a partisan hack” who “bashes his fellow LGBT Americans.”

The health care plank of the Democratic Party's platform, released on Monday ahead of the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C., praises President Barack Obama's 2010 health care reform law, but admits, "No law is perfect."

Michael Brown, the Federal Emergency Management Agency director during Hurricane Katrina in 2005, told The Daily Caller that people should “calm down” about the possibility of a hurricane striking Tampa, Fla., during next week’s Republican National Convention.

New Hampshire Republican state Rep. Mark Warden told The Daily Caller he thinks the state’s Democratic Gov. John Lynch should pardon Adam Mueller, who was sentenced on Monday to nearly three months in jail for recording conversations with police and school officials without their consent.

In 2008 Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, who was unveiled Saturday as Mitt Romney’s running mate on the GOP presidential ticket, told colleagues he was voting against his “principles” and in favor of the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program that authorized government bailouts of the financial sector.

Mitt Romney is attacking President Barack Obama for allowing states to apply for waivers from federal welfare rules, but as governor of Massachusetts he provided cars to welfare recipients and advocated for greater state flexibility in administering benefits.

On the heels of New York Republican Rep. Richard Hanna condemning his own party as “incapable of governing,” his Democratic predecessor, Michael Arcuri, told The Daily Caller that he shares his one-time opponent’s frustration and would like a centrist third party.

The House of Representatives approved Texas Republican Rep. Ron Paul's "Federal Reserve Transparency Act of 2012" by a wide margin in a 327-98 vote Wednesday. But lost in the bipartisan revelry was the fact that eight co-sponsors of the legislation actually voted against it.